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Email Forwardables: Characterizing the Teacher Community in Brazil
&RUUHRV�HOHFWUyQLFRV�UHHQYLDEOHV��&DUDFWHUL]DFLyQ� de la comunidad docente en Brasil
Courriers electroniques renvoyes : Caracterisation de la communaute des enseignants au Bresil
Correios eletrônicos reenviáveis: Caracterização da comunidade docente no Brasil
Reception date: OCTOBER 17th, 2013 / Acceptance date: NOVEMBER 10th, 2014 / Publication date: MARCH 15th, 2015
Find this article in http://magisinvestigacioneducacion.javeriana.edu.co/
doi: 10.11144/Javeriana.M7-15.EFCT
Written by DiLys KarEn rEEsunivErsiDaDE fEDEraL DE goiás
goiás, BrasiL
marCo tuLio DE urzêDa-frEitasunivErsiDaDE fEDEraL DE goiás
goiânia, BrasiL
AbstractIn this article, we analyze four of twelve forwardables, that is, email messages, received over a period of four months with the objective of comprehending the discourses about teach-ers and the teaching profession which pervade the teachers’ cultural space in Brazil. For the purpose of analyzing these forwardables, we combine the concept of cultural domain (Spradley, 1980) and the methodological principles of criti-cal discourse analysis (Fairclough, 2010). Our analyses show another aspect of group identity besides that of professional activities, which is a sense of occupying a place of low social prestige. The forwardables, therefore, by being sent on from teacher to teacher in a continuous chain become a form of social cohesion of this particular group.
Key words plusEmail Forwardables, Teachers, Group Identity.
Transfer to practiceBased on our analysis and considering forwardables as cul-tural artifacts rooted in discourse, we believe that this article might contribute to valuing the cultural meanings that Brazil-ian teachers have given to their practice, and consequently to promoting critical discussions regarding the problems which surround the teaching profession in Brazil. Likewise, we be-lieve that our reflections might encourage Brazilian teachers who work in different contexts to critically examine their situ-ation, to discuss it with their colleagues and with their stu-dents, and finally to look for new and more effective ways to reinvent their practice and their social/cultural position.
To cite this article / Para citar este artículo / Pour citer cet article / Para citar este artigoRees, D. K. & Urzêda-Freitas, M. T. (2015). Email Forwardables: Characterizing the Teacher Community in Brazil. magis, Revista Internacional de Investigación en Educación, 7 (15), 81-96.
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Palabras clave descriptorCorreos electrónicos reenviados, maestros, identidad de grupo.
ResumenEn este artículo se analizan cuatro de doce mensajes reenviables, es decir, correos elec- trónicos recibidos durante un período de cuatro meses, con el objetivo de compren- der los discursos sobre los docentes y la profesión docente que prevalecen en el espacio cultural de los profesores en Brasil. Para analizar estos mensajes reenviados, combinamos el concepto de ámbito cultu-ral (Spradley, 1980) con los principios me-todológicos del análisis crítico del discurso (Fairclough, 2010). Nuestro análisis mues-tra otro aspecto de la identidad de grupo, además del relacionado con las actividades profesionales, que tiene que ver con la sen-sación de ocupar un lugar de bajo prestigio social. Los mensajes, por tanto, al ser envia-dos de maestro a maestro en una cadena continua se convierten en una forma de cohesión social de este grupo en particular.
Transferencia a la prácticaSobre la base de nuestro análisis y conside-rando los mensajes reenviados como arte-factos culturales arraigados en el discurso, este artículo podría contribuir a la valora-ción de los significados culturales que los profesores brasileños han dado a su prácti-ca y, por tanto, a la promoción de debates críticos sobre los problemas que rodean la profesión docente en Brasil. Del mismo modo, nuestras reflexiones podrían animar a los profesores brasileños que trabajan en diferentes contextos a examinar crítica-mente su situación, para discutirla con sus colegas y con sus alumnos y, finalmente, animarlos a buscar nuevas y más efectivas formas de reinventar su práctica y su posi-ción social/cultural.
Mots clés descripteurCourriers électroniques renvoyés, enseignants, identité de groupe.
RésuméDans cet article on analyse quatre parmi douce messages renvoyés, c’est-à-dire, courriers électroniques, reçus pendant une période de quatre mois avec l’objectif de comprendre les paroles sur les enseignants et la profession d’enseignant qu’on a dans l’espace culturel des enseignants au Brésil. Avec l’objectif d’analyser ces messages ren-voyés, on articule le concept de domaine culturel (Spradley, 1980) et les principes méthodologiques de l’analyse critique du discours (Fairclough, 2010). Notre ana-lyse montre un autre aspect de l’identité de groupe, en plus de celui qui concerne les activités professionnelles, il s’agit de la sensation d’occuper un lieu de peu prestige sociale. Puisque les messages sont envoyés d’un enseignant à un autre enseignant dans une chaine continue ces messages se transforment dans une forme de cohésion sociale de ce groupe en particulier.
Transfert à la pratique Sur la base de notre analyse et en consi-dérant les messages en tant qu’artefacts culturels enracinés dans le discours, on croit que cet article pourrait contribuer à la mise en valeur des signifiants culturels que les enseignants brésiliens ont donné à sa pratique, et donc à la promotion de débats critiques sur les problèmes qui entourent à la profession d’enseignant au Brésil. Ainsi, on croit que nos réflexions pourraient ani-mer aux enseignants brésiliens à travailler dans les différents contextes et à exami-ner d’une manière critique leur situation, pour en discuter avec leurs collègues et avec leurs élèves, et enfin les animer pour chercher d’autres façons plus effectives de réinventer leur pratique et leur position sociale/culturelle.
Palavras-chave descritorCorreios eletrônicos reenviados, mestres, identidade de grupo.
ResumoNeste artigo analisam-se quatro das doze mensagens reenviáveis, isto é, correios eletrônicos, recebidos durante um período de quatro meses com o objetivo de com-preender os discursos sobre os docentes e a profissão docente que prevalecem no espaço cultural dos professores no Brasil. Com o fim de analisar estas mensagens re-enviadas, combinamos o conceito de âmbi-to cultural (Spradley, 1980) e os princípios metodológicos da análise crítica do discur-so (Fairclough, 2010). Nossa análise mos-tra outro aspecto da identidade de grupo, além do relacionado com as atividades pro-fissionais, que tem a ver com a sensação de ocupar um lugar de baixo prestígio social. As mensagens, portanto, ao ser enviadas de professor a professor em uma corrente contínua se tornam uma forma de coesão social deste grupo em particular.
Transferência à práticaSobre a base de nossa análise e conside-rando as mensagens reenviadas como ar-tefatos culturais arraigados no discurso, achamos que este artigo poderia contribuir à valorização dos significados culturais que os professores brasileiros têm dado a sua prática e, portanto, à promoção de debates críticos sobre os problemas que rodeiam à profissão docente no Brasil. Do mesmo modo, achamos que nossas reflexões po-deriam animar aos professores brasileiros que trabalham em diferentes contextos a examinar criticamente sua situação, para discutir com seus colegas e com seus alu-nos, e finalmente, animá-los a procurar no-vas e mais efetivas formas de reinventar sua prática e sua posição social/cultural.
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Introduction
In Brazil as elsewhere in the world email has become a central form of communication both at a personal level and at business and work related levels. This fact has sparked studies ranging from a discussion of the specific form and language of emails as a new textual genre (Marcuschi & Xavier, 2005), through studies of the legal nature of emails (Calvo, 2001), to pro-posals by teachers regarding the use of emailing as a means of enhancing foreign language learning (Carvalho, 2010; Paiva, 2001; Souza, 2005).
As a background to the fact that emailing is a part of everyday Brazil-ian life for many, it is necessary, however, to mention the important study entitled Digital Exclusion Map (Mapa da Exclusão Digital, 2003) undertaken for the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) and which pointed out that the number of people who had computers in their homes was 16.209.223.00, approximately 10%, out of a total population of 169.872.850 (p. 60). On a positive note, according to the Digital In-clusion clock created by the NGO Democratization of Computer Access (CDI – Democratização da Informática) every trimester a million new users are digitally included through various government and NGO programs. As reported by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE – Insti-tuto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística - http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/), in 2011 31.2% of Brazilian homes had a computer and 23.8% had internet access. Thus though many more homes have computers since the study by BNDES was concluded, this article in its focus on email forwardables is consequently discussing what takes place amongst a group of the digitally included, and not discussing Brazilians as a nationwide group.
The reason that we are interested in forwardables about teachers is that we work with foreign language teaching and research at the Univer-sidade Federal de Goiás, in Goiânia, Brazil. It is a public university, funded by the Federal Government, and is one of the major universities within the Middle West region of Brazil. It has a total of 13.825 students. The Letras course has 415 students. The first author teaches and researches in the Letras: Licenciatura course which prepares students to be accredited teachers of Portuguese, English, Spanish or French, depending on their choice of Major; she works in the English language Major. In his turn, the second author teaches English and researches about language education in the Centro de Línguas (Language Center), an extension project of the Faculdade de Letras which has currently more than 2.000 students.
The forwardables that are the focus of this article were received over a period of four months, September to December 2011. At first, they were received spontaneously, but after noticing how the topic of these emails was the identity of the teacher in Brazilian society, emails were sent out to a list of students and colleagues asking that they forward any messages that focused on teachers. It was noticed that the same messages were received over and over again from various different senders, an indication that the same forwardables were making the rounds at least within the local social group consisting of teachers or future teachers associated with the Facul-dade de Letras of the Universidade Federal de Goiás. This constant receiving of the same forwardables created an interest in understanding how these messages were expressing the cultural identity of the Brazilian teacher and how they were inserted in certain discursive practices. Thus throughout the text, we will be discussing how these forwardables contribute to the creating of the identity of Brazilian education professionals. In this article, the term identity “refers specifically to those aspects of a person that are defined in terms of his or her group memberships” (Deaux, 2001, p. 1).
Article description | Descripción del artículo | Description de l'article | Artigo descriçãoThe article analyzes cultural artifacts rooted in discourse, and through the discussion of cultural domains and critical discourse analysis, shows an aspect of the group identity for teachers that goes beyond that of professional activities, describing them as occupying a place of low social prestige.
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The Situation of the Teaching Profession in Brazil
The teaching profession is going through a cri-
sis in Brazil. As reported to the Ministry of Education,
there is a deficit of 246.000 teachers (MEC, 2008) con-
sidering all levels of education. The greatest need is for
math, physics and chemistry teachers at the secondary
level. In addition, the Ministry of Education is worried
about the average age of the teaching professional
which is between 40 and 50 years of age. This means
that young people are not seeking out this profession
and that within twenty years, there will be an even
greater lack of teachers.
According to the report, The Attractiveness of the Teaching Profession in Brazil (Atratividade da Car-reira Docente no Brasil), made by the request of the
Carlos Chagas Foundation, and coordinated by re-
searcher Bernadete Gatti, the social prestige of this
profession has diminished over the last decades and
has resulted in a gap between the ideal definition of teaching and the reality of being a teacher. This gap,
in turn, leads to feelings of powerlessness, frustration,
and discouragement (Gatti, 2009, p. 12). The causes
of this gap and the resulting lack of social prestige are
many. One is the change in modern society in which
the school is no longer the only place which offers ac-
cess to knowledge and to social and economic prog-
ress (p. 12). Another cause is the fact that in Brazilian
society, there are lay-teachers, that is, teachers who
have not been through a university teaching certifi-
cate course. The result is that there tends to be an at-
titude that anyone can be a teacher, thus for example,
an Engineering student that knows some English will
pick up some classes to teach in order to pay the way
through college. This type of teacher knows nothing
about Applied Linguistics, Methodology or the re-
search in Second Language Acquisition which are all
topics that a student learns in the university teaching
certificate course.
In addition, when researchers focused on the
student body at universities, it was shown that the
students of the teaching certificate courses came from
less privileged social classes than those in the more
prestigious courses such as Medicine and Law (Diniz-
Pereira, 2011, p. 41). The teaching certificate students
were older as they took longer to get into university
after High School and came in greater number from
the public school system rather than from private
schools. They were also working students that had
to hold down jobs at the same time they were going
through university. Many of these students chose the
teaching certificate course because the cut-off grade
on the university entrance exam was lower for these
courses than for other more prestigious courses. This
cut-off grade is calculated considering the number of
candidates per student place. In the teaching certifi-
cate courses, there are more places than candidates
whereas for Law and Medicine there are more candi-
dates than places.
There are many aspects to be considered when
discussing the Brazilian educational scenario, but in
this article we will simply focus on the way in which
the teaching professional speaks about him/herself.
For example, in an interview study that was done with
thirty-four public school teachers and an equal number
of public school principals, Lemos (2009, p. 120) asked
what caused these professionals to think of abandon-
ing their profession. The three reasons that topped the
list were: 1) the devaluation of the profession in soci-
ety; 2) the violence and indiscipline of the students; 3)
the low pay. In another interview study which resulted
in a book entitled The Teacher as Hostage (O Profes-sor Refém), Zagury (2006) came to the conclusion that
the teacher is a hostage of not having enough time to
fulfill everything that is required nowadays of this pro-
fessional, of a macro system that does not work, of the
indiscipline of the students in the classroom, and lastly
of society itself. This book was based on 1.172 inter-
views with teachers from twenty-two states in Brazil.
Another research study consisting of interviews
with the members of a Municipal District Adminis-
tration and also with Coordinators in a local school,
detected that the administration and the local school
do not communicate effectively and that this causes
frustration and discontent especially for the members
of the local school (Rees & Ferreira, 2012). As one Co-
ordinator stated in an interview, “Another thing that
makes things difficult is that the different depart-
ments don’t speak the same language. One tells us to
do things a certain way, a week later it’s not that way
anymore. Then there’s a crisis because you’ve told the
teacher to do things a certain way and then in a week
you have to change” (p. 7)1.
The Coordinators also mentioned the students’
lack of discipline: “The biggest problem is the lack of
respect. Students tell us to [expletive deleted] with no
hesitation. And the swear words!... They have no lim-
its” (p. 13). When asked if the Coordinators could do
anything about this, they said they try by calling the
parents to the school:
We ask the mother to come and talk with us and
she dumps her problems on us: she’s separated;
she works all day and doesn’t have time to be with
her children, her kids stay out on the street, or the
husband is an alcoholic, in other words, family pro-
blems. The biggest problems aren’t the kids, but the
1 All the translations have been done by the authors.
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families. The families aren’t able to bring their kids up. So they throw the
responsibility on the school. And the school doesn’t have the means of
teaching the student what he should have learned at home: respect. The
student sees his father beat his mother, or has an alcoholic father or a drug
dealer for a father and then the student gets so angry that he takes it out
on us. And then what? (p. 14).
This quote shows that in a local context where the Coordinators were interviewed, there is a feeling that the role of the family in their children’s upbringing has been transferred to the schools. We could say that this situ-ation corroborates the idea that education is not an isolated process for it involves the individual in relation to the social group and the wider society (Morrison, 2008). The fact is that frustrations at all levels coupled with low pay have caused Brazilian teachers to decide to leave the teaching profes-sion and find work elsewhere.
The Forwardables
A total of 12 forwardables were received, which can be divided into 4 main themes: Events in the classroom (4); Exhortation to the teacher (1); The teacher’s worth in society (5); Criticism of the low salaries (2). Of the twelve, 3 were cartoons and the rest were in written text format. As it is not possible to analyze all the forwardables due to the required extent of the article, we have chosen to analyze the forwardables that were sent most frequently. Thus we will analyze four forwardables: one regarding events in the classroom, one regarding the exhortation to the teacher, one regarding the teacher’s salary, and one regarding the teacher’s worth in society. The themes overlap, but in each forwardable it is possible to detect a dominant theme.
Cultural Domain and Critical Discourse Analysis
For the purpose of analyzing these forwardables, we decided to combine two analytical perspectives that complement each other and can help elucidate how the forwardables are cultural artifacts and how they are inserted in discourse. In this way, we will use the concept of cultural domain as described by Spradley (1980) and the methodological principles of critical discourse analysis as discussed by Fairclough (2010).
As stated by Spradley (1980, p. 88), a cultural domain is “a category of cultural meaning that includes other smaller categories”. In order to begin the analysis with this focus in mind, the following chart suggested by Spradley (p. 93) was used:
Table 1.
Cultural Domain Analysis Sheet
Included Terms Semantic Cover Term Relationship_____________ ___________________________ ___________________________ ______________ � ________________________ ___________________________ ___________________________ ______________
Source: Spradley (1980, p. 93)
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The Cover Term refers to the term that is under analysis. For example,
if the teacher is the focus of the analysis in one of the forwardables, the
term teacher would be inserted as the Cover Term. The domains are ana-
lyzed using semantic relationships such as: X is a characteristic of Y; X is a
reason for doing Y; X is a result of Y, and so on. Spradley (1980, p. 93) lists
a total of nine semantic relationships, but allows for the use of others ac-
cording to the focus of the analysis.
Using the Cover Term teacher and the semantic relationship X is a characteristic of Y, it is possible to fill in the chart as follows:
Table 2.
Example of Cultural Domain Analysis
Included Terms Semantic Relationship Cover Term
X is a characteristic of Y
X is a characteristic of the teacher
- Being tired- Being overworked
Authors’ exemplification
Source: Explication of Spradley (1980)
The result is read as: being tired is a characteristic of the teacher;
being overworked is a characteristic of the teacher. Through this analysis,
it is possible to understand the meaning that a certain cultural group as-
signs to specific terms. As Spradley states: “Cultural descriptions can be
used to oppress people or to set them free” (1980, p. 17). Consequently,
to understand the cultural meaning is not just to add to a bank of scien-
tific knowledge, but is a means of understanding how people of a certain
cultural group give meaning to their lives, and accordingly be able to
discuss these meanings as situated within society and its structures of
power and meaning.
In its turn, critical discourse analysis focuses on how language and
discourse relate to power and social change. Thus the sense of critique
that guides this research field is that which highlights the need to unveil,
contest and rearticulate discourses that promote inequalities in particular
and/or in larger contexts. As Fairclough puts it, the sense of critique used
by critical discourse analysis
. . . focuses on what is wrong with a society (an institution, an organization
etc.), and how ‘wrongs’ might be ‘righted’ or mitigated, from a particular
normative standpoint. Critique is grounded in values, in particular views of
the ‘good society’ and of human well-being and flourishing, on the basis
of which it evaluates existing societies and possible ways of changing them
(2010, p. 7)
Given that critical discourse analysis includes analysis of texts in their
different semiotic forms (verbal messages, body language, visual images,
and sounds), its main purpose is to explore “dialectical relations between
discourse and power, and their effects on other relations within the so-
cial process and their elements” (p. 8). One of the central aspects of this
purpose is the concept of ideology: “ways of representing aspects of the
world, which may be operationalized in ways of acting and interacting and
in ‘ways of being’ or identities, that contribute to establishing or sustain-
ing unequal relations of power” (p. 8). However, the author considers that
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ideologies can be contested and rearticulated, especially when they repre-sent or explain the world improperly.
Following these premises and based on a dialectical-relational ap-proach to textual analysis, Fairclough (2010, p. 235) proposes a methodol-ogy comprised by four stages: 1) Focus upon a social wrong2, in its semiotic aspect; 2) Identify obstacles to addressing the social wrong; 3) Consider whether the social order “needs” the social wrong; and 4) Identify possible ways past the obstacles. Stage 1 is about creating “a better understanding of the nature and sources of social wrongs” (p. 235). Stage 2 aims at ap-proaching the social wrong indirectly “by asking what it is about the way in which social life is structured and organized that prevents it from being ad-dressed” (p. 237). Stage 3 is about considering “whether the social wrong in focus is inherent to the social order, whether it can be addressed within it, or only by changing it” (p. 238). And finally, Stage 4 aims at identifying “possibilities within the existing social process for overcoming obstacles to addressing the social wrong in question” (p. 239).
Together with the discussion of cultural domains (Spradley, 1980), and how meanings are assigned, these four methodological stages of critical discourse analysis will be considered in our further analysis, due to the fact that the forwardables represent culturally situated practices composed of different semiotic forms (in this case, verbal messages and visual images).
Forwardable 1 - Events in the Classroom
1. Forwardable - What Grades are These?
Source: Chaunu (2009)
This cartoon has arrived in the authors’ email box consistently since 2009. It was sent on in 2011 by several people with notes to the effect that it was not 2009 anymore, but the scenes depicted continued to be true. It has since been received with the second date changed to 2013. In total, it has been received 10 times.
2 According to Fairclough (2010, p. 235), social wrongs “can be understood in broad terms as aspects of social systems, forms or orders which are detrimental to human well-being, and which could in principle be ameliorated if not eliminated, though perhaps only through major changes in these systems, forms or orders. Examples might be poverty, forms of inequality, lack of freedom or racism”.
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The cartoon, created by Emmanuel Chaunu and published for the first time in the online newspaper Ouest France, began to circulate on blogs in Brazil in June 2009, appearing in French on the blog owned by Professor Elias Rodrigues (www.eliaswordpress.com) on June 13th. He states that he received the cartoon in a post from his friend and colleague Professor Luis Carlos Assis Iasbeck of the Universidade Católica de Brasília. On June 17th, the blogger Sarico (http://www.blog-br.com/sarico) mentions receiving an email with this cartoon. He uses the description of the cartoon to discuss how the Brazilian classroom has changed over the last 30 years. He does not mention the fact that the cartoon was first produced in France focus-ing on the French classroom. On the 8th of July 2009, the cartoon appears already translated into Portuguese on the blog Direito e Arte – Música e Caricatura (Law and Art – Music and Cartoons – www.direitoearte.blog/lemonde.fr).
The cartoon depicts a woman teacher which concurs with the femi-nization of the teaching professional in Brazil (Gatti, 2009, p. 10). It has honed in on a widespread societal angst by depicting the changes in the power relations within the classroom. Using the concept of cultural domain (Spradley, 1980), it is possible to analyze the 1969 drawing of the teacher in the following way:
Table 3.
Forwardable 1 - Cultural Domain Analysis 1
Included Terms Semantic Relation Cover Term
X is/are the characteristic(s) of the teacher
- Upright posture with shoulders back- An impassive facial expression with closed eyes- Hands resting on the table with one curled into a fist- Small lines drawn above the head depicting confidence
Source: Own elaboration
From this posture, it is possible to conclude that the teacher is confident of her position of power, sure of her place in that setting and of the possibility of being heard by parents. The cultural domain of the teacher is one of confidence and of empowerment. The teacher’s voice is heard. The parents turn away from the teacher and address their child for explanations. On the other hand, the teacher in 2009 has the follow-ing characteristics:
Table 4.
Forwardable 1 - Cultural Domain Analysis 2
Included Term Semantic Relation Cover Term
X is/are the characteristic(s) of the teacher
- A curved posture with shoulders bent away from the parents- A worried facial expression with eyes wide open- Elbows resting on table with one hand at the mouth- Small lines drawn in front of the face depicting worry
Source: Own elaboration
The teacher in this section of the cartoon does not have control over her own classroom. Power has been transferred from the teacher to the
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demands of the child shown in the figures of the parents who turn toward
the teacher with looks of anger demanding an explanation. Thus the cul-
tural domain embodied in the word teacher is no longer the same as that
in 1969. The teacher now is powerless, a figure that is harassed and from
which obedience to the wishes of the family is expected.
The cartoon in France was a pictorial lead in to a discussion about
whether or not parents had the right to question the teacher’s authority. In
Brazil, on the other hand, the cartoon was not forwarded as a gambit for
a discussion about whether society should take a direction that could end
up disempowering the teacher. Rather, the cartoon was sent on as a picto-
rial depiction of what has inexorably happened to the teacher, a systematic
disempowerment leading to a culturally depreciated role in society. The
forwarders, who were all teachers, sent on the cartoon as an expression
of how they felt as professionals in the field of education. In this way, the
cartoon became personalized, a visual depiction of how the ones who
forwarded it saw their own condition in Brazilian society. The forward-
ing became an intentional act of identification with and participation in
an evaluation of their cultural role. It also became a protest against that
imposed role as comments in the body of the emails that accompanied the
forwardable attested: “How much longer can we put up with this?”; “This
is our sad reality!”; “We laugh [at our reality] in order not to cry”.
Considering the methodological principles of critical discourse analy-sis proposed by Fairclough (2010), we can see that the social wrong de-
picted in the cartoon is the dramatic disempowerment of the teacher as a
professional throughout the last four decades, which in our point of view
is also related to the changes which have occurred within the same period
of time concerning the role of parents in their children’s upbringing. This
social wrong can be observed both in the visual images and in the verbal
message of the cartoon. The main obstacle to addressing the disempower-
ment of the teacher before her/his students, their parents and the whole
society is that this position has gradually become naturalized and trivial-
ized in Brazil. In other words, most Brazilians, including parents, students,
teachers and politicians, tend to consider it a mere reflection of our culture
that cannot be contested and changed. This perception leads us to think
that the social wrong in focus is somehow “necessary” for Brazilian social
order. Thus the only possible way past the obstacles we can see is to build
and spread critical analysis of this situation so that teachers start to refuse
directly and/or indirectly the role and the position they have been forced
to embrace. The forwarding of the emails is an attempt to protest the
position, yet the sense of powerlessness to effect change seems to be an
underlying motif.
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Teacher with pride.
Teacher with pride.
If a doctor, a lawyer or a dentist had at the same time 45 people in his/her office
or consulting room, all with different needs, and some not wanting to be there,
and the doctor, the lawyer or the dentist had to treat them all with a high level
of professionalism for ten months, then they might get an idea of what the
teacher’s work in the classroom is like.
If you are a tEaChEr – BE ProuD.
(Forwardable received six times)
Email forwardable with no specified authorship
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This text does not have a specific author nor a site of publication (blog, opinion piece, social network etc.), although it is clearly grounded in a discourse which defines teachers as deserving admiration due to the hard work they undertake.
The forwardable begins with the exhortation, “Teacher with pride” repeated twice. It is possible to state that an exhortation for pride occurs when a group feels that it does not have social prestige. Diniz-Pereira (2011, p. 47) points out that the social representation of the teaching profession “is strongly marked by a feeling of inferiority, mediocrity, and incapacity”. In the forwardable the professions that are contrasted to the teacher are doctor, lawyer, and dentist, professions that are socially more prestigious. This prestige can be perceived in the higher salaries that these professionals make, and in the fact that the university courses for these professions are the ones that are the most sought after. In con-trast, the teaching certificate courses are going through a crisis with more places than candidates. At our university, there are 500 places that are not filled annually in the teaching certificate courses. Fewer and fewer people want to be teachers.
The argument in the forwardable in favor of the teaching profession is to show the characteristic of what the teacher has to face daily and to indirectly contrast this to the other three professions that are mentioned. Thus, using Spradley (1980), it is possible to set up the following cultural domain characterizing the teaching profession:
Table 5.
Forwardable 2 - Cultural Domain Analysis 1
Included Term Semantic Relation Cover Term
X is/are the characteristic(s) of the teaching profession
- Dealing with 45 people at a time- Dealing with the same people for 10 months- Dealing with people who don’t want to be in class- Dealing with them in a professional way
Source: Own elaboration
This contrasts to doctors, lawyers, and dentists who only have to
deal with one person at a time and intermittently, not steadily for ten months. Additionally, most clients of the three professions have personally sought out the professional services even if they might not enjoy the expe-rience. This contrasts to the teacher who has people in the classroom who have been forced to be there by society and often see no value in learning history, English, algebra and so on.
“A high level of professionalism” is also a cultural domain which the reader has to elaborate, but can have the following characteristics:
Table 6.
Forwardable 2 - Cultural Domain Analysis 2
Included Term Semantic Relation Cover Term
X is/are the characteristic(s) of professionalism
- Being polite- Being calm- Being organized- Being firm- Being dedicated
Source: Own elaboration
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Hence the teacher, in the face of a difficult situation characterized by opposition, is professional. Implied is the fact that the teacher has a heavy load, much heavier than the other three professions, yet it is these profes-sions that receive more social respect.
Drawing on Fairclough (2010), we can see that the social wrong depicted in this forwardable is the perception that the teacher is profes-sional because s/he knows how to masterfully overcome the difficulties of her/his daily routine at schools. The main obstacle to addressing this social wrong in Brazil is, in our point of view, the indirect (and sometimes direct) acceptance of teachers’ bad working conditions, which leads to the point of teachers themselves assuming that they are professionals because they can, for instance, attend to 45 different people at the same time under difficult circumstances. And we believe that this “ability” is something to be contested, not to be celebrated. Like the previous forwardable, this one allows us to consider that the social wrong in focus is somehow “neces-sary” for Brazilian social order, which has always tried to postpone struc-tural changes in the teaching career, especially regarding the teacher’s salary and working conditions. Thus one possible way to overcome the obstacles is to think more carefully and more critically about the working conditions which were historically and culturally imposed on teachers in Brazil, so that we can elaborate local strategies to change the larger edu-cational structure.
3. Forwardable - The Teacher’s Worth in Society
We don’t need EDuCation
We don’t need tEaChErs
After all…Why be a first worLD country if we’re fine the way we are…Ronaldinho Gaúcho (soccer player): 1.400.000.00 Reais a monthHonored at the Brazilian Academy of Letters – hE’s EruDitE
Tiririca (a humorist elected to Congress): 36.000.00 Reais a month besides emolumentsMember of the Comity of Education and Culture in the Congress . . . as thE gau-Chos (Brazilians from the southernmost state) say – tChê . . . how aBout that?
transLating, thE CLown’s saLary wouLD Pay 30 tEaChErs anD for thosE who say EDuCation isn’t imPortant, hirE tiririCa to tEaCh your KiD.
Moral of the Story:The teacher doesn’t make much because they are only good for teaching us useless things like: Reading, writing and thinking.
Suggestion:Change the school curriculum and offer new subjects:- Physical Education: Soccer;- Music: Sertaneja, Pagode, Axé (pop styles of Brazilian music);- History: Great Personalities of Brazilian Corruption, Biography of the Heroes of Big Brother TV show, The Evolution of the Thoughts of Celebrities;- Math: Multiplication of Fraudulent Campaign Money;- Portuguese and Literature: ??????? What for?????????- Biology, Physics and Chemistry: Excluded because they’re too complicated.
This is just great or do you want more??!!!
this is our BraziL
(Forwardable received 7 times)
Email forwardable with no specified authorship
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The authorship of this email forwardable is
anonymous, however the textual voice or narrator
is someone linked to education, probably a teacher.
This person is also angry at the state Brazilian society
is in and demonstrates this anger in the ironic tone
used to propose actions that are obviously the oppo-
site of what s/he thinks is good. The text is written
from within Brazilian society as the narrator uses the
pronouns “we” and “our” marking herself/himself as
a member of this society. As a result, the idealized
reader to whom the text is directed is also a member
of Brazilian society and is included in the “we” and the
“our” pronouns.
Two famous Brazilians are mentioned: Ronald-
inho Gaúcho and Tiririca. Ronaldinho Gaúcho is a foot-
ball star who plays for the Flamengo team and for the
Brazilian national team. He along with the coach of
the Flamengo team were invited to a commemorative
dinner at the Brazilian Academy of Letters, and both
received the Machado de Assis Medal. According to
the press releases, they were invited in order to help
celebrate the centenary of the birth of the author José
Lins do Rêgo who was an ardent Flamengo fan. Tiriri-
ca, in his turn, is a television comedian that got elected
to Congress as a result of a protest vote. Before he
was able to assume his congressional seat, he had to
take a literacy test to make sure he knew how to read
and write. He is now part of the Education and Culture
Committee in the Congress, the argument being that
he is part of popular culture and thus will have contri-
butions to make to that sector.
Ronaldinho Gaúcho and Tiririca have not had
any direct connection with the Brazilian education
system. Both came from poor families, Tiririca has
had very little formal education, and both were able
to rise socially because of their particular talents and
the importance given to these types of talents in Bra-
zilian society. Soccer is a revered sport in Brazil and
the best players soon become millionaires. Television
culture with its slapstick comedy is a popular venue
of entertainment and its proponents soon become
famous and well-off. Yet, in spite of the fact that nei-
ther one has ever been associated throughout their
professional lives with educational concerns, both
have now become connected to groups that repre-
sent or in some way deal with education and literate
culture. To the author of the forwardable, this is an
irony present in Brazilian public life as can be inferred
by the use of capital letters indicating indignation,
“tChê – how aBout that!”, and even in the reference
to Tiririca as “thE CLown” (o palhaço) and not as
“the humorist”.
Analyzing the meaning of the word “palhaço” in
Brazilian Portuguese and culture, it is possible to set up
the following cultural domain chart:
Table 7.
Forwardable 3 Cultural Domain Analysis
Included Term Semantic Relation Cover Term
Xis/are the
characteristic(s) ofpalhaço
- Being a buffoon- Being a stooge- Being a fool- Being uneducated- Being impolite- Being irrational
Source: Own elaboration
On the other hand, the word humorist does not
carry any of these pejorative meanings. Thus the au-
thor of the text deliberately insults Tiririca by choosing
the word “palhaço” to refer to him.
Considering the principles of critical discourse analysis (Fairclough, 2010), we can observe that the
main social wrong depicted in this forwardable is the
attempt to call attention to the problems of a specific
professional group (teachers) by devaluing other pro-
fessionals (soccer players and humorists). One of the
central problems in addressing this social wrong is that
the supposed inferiority and unworthiness of profes-
sionals whose functions are not directly associated
with formal education, intellectual work or erudite
culture has also been naturalized in Brazil. This can be
observed in the fact that most people tend to read this
forwardable and totally agree with its message, that
is, they find it normal to highlight the worth of teach-
ers by highlighting the unworthiness of soccer play-
ers and humorists. Like in the previous forwardables,
we believe that the social wrong depicted in this one
is to some extent “necessary” for the social order in
Brazil, which “needs” to establish a competition be-
tween groups that are symbolically diminished in the
Brazilian imaginary in order to reinforce and naturalize
their symbolic and material (in the case of teachers)
inferiority. Hence one possible way past the obstacles
is, in our point of view, to highlight the need to fight
for respect and dignity without underestimating the
talent and the worth of others.
Another point that we consider important to
note is that, throughout the entire forwardable, there
is the evaluation of Brazil as not being a first world
country. It can be deduced that to the author of the
email, a first world country is a country that values
education and teachers. The statements “We don’t
need EDuCation”, “We don’t need tEaChErs”, “Why be
a first worLD country if we’re fine the way we are” are
obviously the opposite of what he considers impor-
tant, and thus are ironic. This tone reaches its apex
in the section with the suggestions as to the school
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curriculum. Through this list, it is possible to infer that the characteristics of
Brazilian society include corruption scandals (“Great Personalities of Brazil-
ian Corruption”), bad TV shows (“Big Brother TV show”), bad music (“Ser-
taneja, Pagode, Axé”), a reductionist view of sport (only soccer), and a rejec-
tion of anything complex (“Biology, Physics, Chemistry - Excluded because
they’re too complicated”). The low moral and cultural level of Brazilian soci-
ety is linked to the devaluation of teachers in society because “they are only
good for teaching us useless things like: Reading, writing, and thinking”.
This forwardable specifically criticizes Brazilian society, but creates
a contrast to other unnamed places (first world countries) that apparently
are not in the same situation as Brazil due to the fact that they value teach-
ers. These places are posited as being the opposite of Brazil. In this way, a
sense of Brazil losing out on the large scale of the world stage is developed.
Brazil is doomed to be second rate unless it changes and begins to value
teachers and education. Hence, the cultural meaning assigned to Brazil is
one of inferiority. There is no criticism offered of the discourse of binary
positions such as inferior/superior and Third World/First World.
4. Forwardable - Teachers’ Salaries
Today we are going to pretend to be a math teacher. I’m going to give you some
math problems to solve
Problem # 1A teacher works 5 hours a day, 5 classes with 40 students each. How many
students will s/he attend a day?
Answer: 200 students a day.
If we consider 22 work days. How many students will s/he attend a month?
Answer: 4.400 students a month.
Let’s imagine that no student misses class (hahaha) and that each of them de-
cides to pay the teacher the money to buy some popcorn: 80 cents a day. How
much will the teacher make a day?
Answer: 160.00 Reais a day.
If we consider 22 work days. How much will the teacher make a month?
Answer: At the end of the month the teacher will make 3.520,00 Reais.
Problem # 2The wage level is 1.187.00 Reais for a teacher to attend 4.400 students. How
much does the teacher make for each student attended?
Answer: Aproximately 27 cents a month.
(wow, we’re worth less than a bag of popcorn)…
(Forwardable received three times)
Email forwardable with no specified authorship
In order to understand the forwardable, it is necessary to know how
the Brazilian school system works. It is divided between public and private
schools. In the public system there are municipal schools that teach up
to the equivalent of the eighth year of schooling and the state schools
that teach the equivalent of high school. The public schools are attended
by lower middle class and working class students. A characteristic of the
middle class is to send their children to private schools in search of an
education that will guarantee a better future for them and access to public
universities which are the best higher education institutions and are tuition
free. Public schools are considered to have a lower educational standard
due to the overcrowded classrooms and in some cases the poor infrastruc-
ture of the schools.
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In addition to the municipal and state schools, there are also feder-ally run public schools. They are a minority and are linked to the federal universities and are the location in which pre-service trainees do their practice teaching. There are also federally run technical schools. The fed-eral public schools are considered to offer a higher level of education than the other types of public schools. This is a result of the fact that many teachers of the federal public schools have post-graduate degrees along with better salaries and also because the federal schools have a better infrastructure.
The length of a Brazilian school day period is half a day. Thus one school building can have three different school periods. The morning one runs from 7 a.m. to 12 a.m., the afternoon from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m., and the night one from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Each period can have a different school principle and staff and each period attends different types of stu-dents. For example, the night period usually has older students who have dropped out of school and have come back to get their formal education. They are people who come to school already worn out by a long workday. Many of the women bring their children with them to class. The Federal Government has recognized this fact and has created the EJA Program (Educação para Jovens e Adultos – Education for Young People and Adults).
In 2008, Federal Law number 11.738 was passed which established a wage level for public school teachers, consequently, no municipality or state could legally pay wages below this level. The wage level mentioned in the forwardable is the one established for 2011. It has since been raised. It is important to point out that the wage level is extremely low and many teaching professionals teach in the three periods available – morning, af-ternoon, and night – to make enough money to live.
The forwardable considers a teacher that is teaching during one school day period, approximately 5 hours a day. Using a cultural domain chart, it is possible to analyze the bag of popcorn:
Table 8.
Forwardable 4 Cultural Domain Analysis
Included Term Semantic relation Cover Term
X is/are a characteristic(s) of a bag of popcorn
- Being a snack, not a meal
- Being the cheapest snack
- Being worth 80 cents
Authors’ analysis
Source: Own elaboration
The message is obvious: economically the teacher is worth less than
a bag of popcorn, the cheapest snack possible. Within the present capital-istic society, the teacher is worth almost nothing: “wow, we’re worth less than a bag of popcorn”. Implicit in this line is a sense of the powerlessness of the teacher within Brazilian society. This in turn is manifested in the low salaries of the profession. The teacher is needed and as mentioned previ-ously there is a deficit of teachers, but the economic recognition of the importance of this profession has not yet occurred.
Drawing on Fairclough (2010), it is possible to observe that the so-cial wrong depicted in this forwardable is the extreme low wage paid for
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teachers in Brazil, which reflects the position of this professional group
within Brazilian culture and imaginary. Relating this fact to the larger so-
ciety and to the history of Brazil, we can say that the main obstacle to ad-
dressing it is that the devaluation of teachers, which is materially expressed
in their low salaries, has also become a naturalized situation in Brazilian
society. There is, as well, an ideology in the country according to which
teachers have to work for love and not for money, as they knew how
much they would be paid for doing their job. Like the others, this for-
wardable leads us to assume that the social wrong it depicts is somehow
“necessary” for Brazilian social order, especially because the money that
could be paid for teachers can be “applied” to other areas – considered
more important than education. In brief, the less the governments pay
for teachers, the more they can invest in other public and private projects
which hardly ever benefit the whole society. Thus we believe that one pos-
sible way past the obstacles is to engage in public debates regarding the
worth and complexity of the teaching career, highlighting its role in the
transformation of the social order.
We consider that this forwardable served as a way of uniting a pro-
fessional group by focusing on a topic that has a consensus, that is, teach-
ers are badly paid and not valued within Brazilian society. Teachers might
disagree about many things, but the low wages is not one of them.
Concluding Remarks
In our point of view, the email forwardables that were analyzed in this
article show another aspect of group identity beyond that of professional
activities which is a sense of occupying a place of low social prestige. It is a
group that does not feel it is a part of the power groups within society and
feels that it is not respected in monetary terms and is not respected as a
competent professional by administrators, parents or students.
The forwardables were sent from teacher to teacher and were used
as a means of registering a protest against the position of the teacher in
society. This protest was sent to fellow teachers for the most part, and
through this helped create a sense of identity and rehearsed the anxiet-
ies of the teacher cultural group in Brazil, the anxieties regarding low wag-
es, student disrespect, problems with parents, and the place of low social
prestige. The forwardables speak for those that are outside the power
groups where the wages and the school administrative rules are de-
cided. The forwardables, therefore, by being sent on from teacher to
teacher in a continuous chain, become a form of social cohesion of this
particular group. This fact corroborates the sense of critique suggested
by Fairclough (2010) insofar as it unveils what is wrong with a society
and simultaneously works as an alternative to mitigate this social wrong
from a situated perspective, that is, a perspective rooted in socio-histo-
rical boundaries.
In conclusion, it is possible to say that the forwardables act as a
link that represents the concerns of a certain group and that this link via
discourse and the internet is capable of creating larger and larger circles
of those who feel bound together by specific concerns. The forward-
ables become a voice through which the teacher community articulates
its concerns, its frustrations and its sense of powerlessness regarding
the changes in power relations in the classroom, the lack of prestige in
society, and the low salaries.
In a more practical instance, it is possible to use forwardables such as
these to discuss with future and working teachers the discourse practices
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that surround the cultural identity of the profession and how these emanate from the popular imaginary regarding the teacher and the teaching profession in Brazil. After all, critical thinking might be one of the most effective alternatives we have to produce coun-ter discourses about and for the teacher community in our country.
About the authors
Dilys Karen Rees teaches in the Faculdade de Letras at Universidade Federal de Goiás. At the undergraduate level, she teaches language and literatures of English and at the post-graduate level she teaches Intercultural Aspects of the Classroom researched through Ethnographic Studies.
Marco Tulio de Urzêda-Freitas teaches English in the Centro de Línguas of the Universidade Federal de Goiás. He also teaches Critical Language Learning and Queer Literacies in English teacher education courses in Goiânia.
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